The US and Mexico today jointly announced new import restrictions that will reinstate section 232 tariffs on some steel and aluminum imported from Mexico.
The new measures require imported steel to be melted and poured in the US-Mexico-Canada free trade agreement (USMCA) region, while aluminum should not contain primary aluminum or be smelt or cast in Belarus, China, Iran or Russia, effective today. The section 232 tariffs of 25pc and 10pc on steel and aluminum, respectively, were introduced by former-president Donald Trump in 2018, initially including Canada and Mexico, who later retaliated with their own tariffs. The two countries were exempted from 232 tariffs in 2019.
The administration added that the new measures will prevent Chinese steel from triangulating through Mexico, which both the administration and a bipartisan group of lawmakers have accused Mexico of allowing. China's output far surpasses its requirements, said US trade representative Katherine Tai, and the new requirements will prevent that steel from evading tariffs and gaining access to the US market.
Senior administration officials yesterday said "consistently" increasing imports of steel from Mexico are putting pressure on the US industry. Mexican steel association Canacero, still, reported a 27pc drop in steel exports to the US, while Global Trade Tracker — which tracks data from the US Census Bureau — showed a 15pc drop in iron and steel imports of all types to the US from Mexico.
The announcement came months after the bipartisan group of lawmakers introduced the Stop Mexico's Steel Surge Act, which would completely rescind the section 232 tariffs exemption on Mexican steel. It is unclear whether the legislation is connected to today's announcement of the new import measures.
Mexican economy secretary Raquel Buenrostro in April announced the requirement of steel import certificates verifying the country of origin, steelmaker, product specifications and volume of the shipment, among other information.